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Families of all shapes and sizes and backgrounds can benefit from understanding how to incorporate giving into their family conversations and activities. There are other distinct advantages to introducing giving into your stepfamily system.

In stepfamilies, there are children who, more than likely, are not enthralled with the reconfiguration of their family.  One powerful way to begin to blend your family is to introduce a conversation around giving back and philanthropy.

No matter how conflictual the situation may be in your stepfamily situation, you can be sure that there are other families out there who are seriously challenged, be it with poverty and homelessness, with illness or developmental delays; or with lack of access to resources like medical care, clean water, healthy food, etc.

 

When we tell our kids and stepkids to “count their blessings” they are likely to focus on what they are unhappy about and what’s wrong in their life.  When we show our children through example, through direct experience, and through mediums that resonate with them, how truly lucky they are, they can begin to draw on the healing power of gratitude in their lives.

 

Giving is Good For You

Research shows that when we are generous, when we volunteer and donate, we FEEL better – literally. It turns out that being altruistic is one of the more healthy acts we can perform – it helps us be more optimistic, resilient, and physically well, throughout our lives.  What most people don’t realize is that it’s not about the SIZE of the gift – it’s the act of giving – that makes the difference. Anyone can be philanthropic – the word simply means acting on one’s love of mankind.  We can show our love for others in all sorts of ways, regardless of how much money we have in the bank.

Involving All Family Members – No Matter the Ages

When considering opening up the possibility of giving together, a great place to start is to find out what each person in your family has experienced around giving.

 

A way to begin is to simply explore how giving has been experienced, such as:

We all give and receive and some experiences are more memorable than others. Let’s all take a couple of minutes to share a time when we each gave in a way that really felt good, and also a time when we received that was particularly special.

 

This conversation could be used to capture some initial family values that each of you share individually.  As people share you could have pieces of plain paper or a roll of butcher paper in front of you with different colored markers.  As you listen, anyone could pick up a marker and write down or draw a picture capturing the value that they are hearing in what someone is sharing.

 

Once all your stories and values have been captured, see where there may be some overlapping values that you call are aligned with – you can group similar words together and come up with one or two words that capture that theme.  These shared values create the cornerstone of your blended family’s foundation.

 

From Values to Family Mission

Once you all agree on your particular shared values (these could be anything from kindness to generosity to education to animals to orderliness…) you can then explore your collective mission that you would all feel good about getting behind in your giving.

 

For example, if you all agree on generosity, your mission could be something like: “We tithe 10% of what we receive financially towards those who don’t have as much as we do.” If your shared value includes animals, you could have a statement such as: “We give x # of hours each month to an organization that shelters animals.”

 

The most important part of all these activities is to include everyone and to make it a shared exploration. If any one person over-rides others, you will not have engagement, you will have resentment.  If it becomes a power struggle between certain family members, see what you can do to let go of any agenda or attachment to how this is all supposed to turn out or look, and begin to get curious about what else is trying to happen.

 

Maybe your particular family isn’t ready to draft a mission yet and needs a chance to explore other ways of giving together.

 

Giving Together Builds Traditions

Blended families can be challenged in having shared traditions. They often have fractured times during holidays and other celebrations due to the different family homes and dynamics.  Having a central theme around giving that your blended family does together gives you a chance to create new, shared experiences and traditions that are your own.  Families feel closer and more bonded and connected when they share in experiences that help them feel good – positive memories last a lifetime and do wonders for building bridges.

Resources

When thinking about incorporating giving in your family, there are some terrific resources to help you get started. Some of these that I’ve found to be particularly helpful are:

Youth Give – their resources page has free downloadable pdfs with excellent conversation starters, family activities, and a resource list including books for children of all ages – all created by Lisa Parker of Family Circle Advisors.

Catalytic Women — a memberships site with an extensive library of resources for anyone interested in becoming philanthropically involved.  They also do a series of webinars and host evocative conversations and events related to philanthropy.  We presented on Philanthropic Journeys with Family with Melanie Hamburger for their July webinar – go here to learn more.

Inspired Legacies – Tracy Gary, author of Inspired Philanthropy, provides consultation and speaks about philanthropy and is a leading expert in the field.

 

For More Information – Join Us Tuesday, July17th, in Riverside CA at StepFamily Systems!

Or Contact Us for a private consultation

 

 

 

Enjoy this guest post from Melanie Hamburger from Catalytic Women:

I was talking recently with a member of Catalytic Women and mentioned the topic of connecting family travel plans with our values of giving back. (Catalytic Women hosts a free webinar on this topic on July 11, so it must have been on my mind! Click here to RSVP).  The story she shared about her family’s philanthropic journeys is worth repeating. I loved it as an example of how we share our passions with others and, in particular, the multifaceted roles of women as providers, nurturers and educators.

 

Her parents founded a business together. Perhaps this formed their culture of aligning family values, good fortune and lifelong learning. As her mom considered retiring she reflected on her love of traveling. What began as special trips with her children – celebrating her daughters’ 30th and 40th birthdays in Africa or India; a coming of age trip when each grandchild turned 10 – morphed into a travel business. Completely self-taught, she modeled her trips on well-known destination planners but then did it her own way, adding shared local experiences such as volunteering. Her philanthropic journeys included family and shaped her new “post-retirement” career.

 

Most of us have good intentions to create these kinds of experiences for our own families – as we plan travels to local or far-flung destinations. But how can we truly make the most out of our summer travel plans, without it feeling like one more thing to do… to research… to figure out… to do well?

 

I’m interested in ways that you include children of any age in planning your travels. How do you bring giving into vacations and ignite their curiosity about others?

 

Intense school homework loads, competitive sports and omnipresent technological distractions have never made it harder to carve out “quality” family time. And who wants the killjoy of insisting that these rare times together include “learning” and “giving”? Getting our kids excited about where we’re going and what we can do together shouldn’t feel so hard.

 

Surely, there must be some examples of ways to bring out the best in ourselves as we travel together that feel do-able for busy families! Let’s get past that self-inflicted goal of perfect parenting. Let’s just start with what we can do now.

 

It’s not too late to make this summer vacation a time of travel and connecting as a family. Share your experiences with us. How do you and your family unplug from day to day responsibilities, emails, and electronics, so that you can use the precious few weeks of summer to plug into experiences that instill a sense of resilience and appreciation, and expand the hearts and minds of your children?

 

We’ll share your stories on July 11, when Catalytic Women founder Melanie Hamburger taps the expertise of Jamie Traeger-Muney and Emily Bouchard of Wealth Legacy Group by sharing real life stories, examples and results from philanthropic journeys. Join this conversation about women, wealth and philanthropy on travel and children. Share and learn how to engage multiple generations in the planning and implementing of family travel and giving experiences – tapping the nature of our “true wealth.” Regardless of age, or even if we define family as a group of our closest friends, the spirit of our summer travel get us thinking about our impact on the larger world around us.

 

Contact us with your ideas, successes and challenges. To join the July 11 webinar, register here.

 

 

I was recently made aware of Mary Beth Caschetta’s article in the New York Times about her personal experience with being disinherited.  My heart broke as I read how her father chose to use the reading of his will to express to her his enduring disapproval from the grave:

“My father had put my mother’s name on the deed to the house and made her the beneficiary of his investments, leaving the rest of his estate to my three older brothers. It was an act accomplished in a single sentence: ‘I leave no bequest to my daughter for reasons known to her.’ ”

From the rest of the article, it seems that the two of them had differences throughout their lives, but had made steps towards reconciliation only months before he died unexpectedly.

Whether their new ability to express their love for each other more openly would have changed his mind or intention related to his will is something she will never know. And many people find themselves in her circumstance where they are unable to explore, discuss, and connect with their parents around what would cause them to make that choice and what they might be able to do to change their thinking or intentions.

What continues to bring distress to my heart and fuel my passion for my work with families is that if people felt skilled and able to have these difficult and emotional conversations effectively, they could potentially heal and move through long standing wounds and pain that continue to perpetuate from one generation to the next.  And maybe I could help effect a different outcome…

In Estate Planning for the Blended Family, we discuss the sticky issue of disinheritance in our chapter on Testamentary Planning.  One thing we strongly recommend is that if this is a choice you believe is absolutely necessary, that you make the effort to communicate your reasons why you’ve made the choices you have — as this will help to ease the blow and keep your memory alive in ways that are more positive and less painful for your prodigal son or daughter, no matter what they may have done to have caused you to keep them from receiving your assets.

A powerful exercise we recommend is that, as you write your reasons for the disinheritance, you also share what you enjoyed most about that person and particular memories from the span of your life together that mattered to you in loving ways.  Some people do this in their ethical will.  This will further nurture a healing place in their heart even as they wrestle with the pain of not being included as they may have thought they would be.

If at all possible, we encourage parents to share their decision to disinherit while they are alive, so that the impact of the decision is not quite so dramatic at the painful time of their death.

For more information about how to go about having these conversations successfully as a family, or between a father and a daughter, contact us for a private consultation.

 

 

On May 16th, 2012, Mary Kennedy, estranged wife of Robert Kennedy Jr., took her life.

Her suicide devastated her family on multiple levels, resulting in two separate funerals with her family of origin at one and the Kennedys at the other – with neither side included at the other.  I wonder what her children would have wanted.  At least they got to choose where she was buried.

The emotional landmines associated with an unexpected, painful, confusing suicide can blow a family apart and wreck havoc on the lives of the children.  The need to find fault when looking for a reason for why she would take her life, kept her children from being able to reach out and experience warmth from all those who loved their mother when the children needed them the most.

When we are certain about who is right and who is to blame, we close down and limit possibilities for intimate connection, for loving support, and for much needed understanding.  When we can let go of needing to be right, and can open our hearts – in the midst of terrible pain — we are able to connect from a place of love and begin to dispel some of the hurt, and even hatred.  In this way, healing can begin to happen and the suffering that led to a suicide in the first place can begin to dissipate as those who experience that deep loss can console and support each other.

Children need the adults in their lives to stop blaming each other when they are upset and unhappy.

Children need the adults who love them to stop and ask: “What would love do?” when confronted with something as painful as a suicide.

This traumatic time will be forever branded in the hearts and minds of Mary’s children, and will shape their relationships with each other, with their loved ones now, and with their future spouses and partners.  This is Mary’s legacy, and it is being solidified by the warring factions that are her children’s family members.  For Conor, 17, Kyra, 16, Fin, 14 and Aidan, 10, trust has been shattered by their mother, and instead of joining together to pick up the pieces, her family members picked up the shards and pointed the sharp ends at each other, causing rifts to grow deeper.

When we focus on our anger and hate, we don’t have to feel the sadness, grief, and sorrow, nor do we have to wrestle with the confusion and uncertainty that is the truth – the only one who will ever know the reason for her suicide is Mary herself.

My heart and prayers go out to all the members of her family and my sincere wish is that they can find a way to come together with respect, honor, and love.

 

© 2012 Emily Bouchard | 336 Bon Air Center, #145 · Greenbrae, CA 94904 | info@emilybouchard.com